charles frederick chandler - ACS Publications - American Chemical

College, Professor Louis Agassiz of Harvard College, and a New Bedford High School science teacher, decided to send his 17-year-old son Charles Freder...
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OCTOBER,I955

CHARLES FREDERICK CHANDLER ARTHUR W. HIXSON Columbia University, New York, N. Y.

I x 1854, when Columbia College was celebrat,ing its first centennial, a New Bedford, Massachusetts, dry goods merchant made a decision that was to have a profound effect on the university's second-century life and on the development of chemical science in America for generations thereafter. That merchant, acting on the strong advice of Professor Charles Joy of Union College, Professor Louis Agassiz of Harvard College, and a New Bedford High School science teacher, decided to send his 17-year-old son Charles Frederick Chandler, who had finished a year a t Harvard, to Germany to study chemistry and other sciences a t Berlin and Gottingen. Young Chandler, who had been passionately interested in scientific studies from early boyhood, was elated beyond measure. His year a t Harvard was not a particularly happy one. Not only did he find the instmction in chemistry poorly organized and inadequate, but the college's general attitude toward science students was depressing. They were usually classified as being hopelessly deficient in Latin and Greek and metaphysics, with no background for cultural scholarship or dignified intellectual usefulness. I n Chandler's words. ''they were despised." In the early morning of July 3, 1854, Chandler sailed joyously out of New York harbor as a guest on a mhalinn- shin . owned bv a friend of the family. In t,he evening of that day he sat on the deck, limp from seasickness, when the captain passed by and remarked, "Young man, being a student of natural science, you are particularly fortunate in sailing on this trip. Tomorrow morning you will have the opportunity to observe a phenomenon rarely seen by passengers a t sea. The sun will rise twice. Meet me here a t five o'clock." Chandler, feeling miserable but eager to see the rare phenomenon, staggered to deck a t the appointed time where he found the captain giving orders to the crew.

Turning to him thc raptail1 4 d , "1"d111\\that seaman aloft to the boom of t,he mainmast topsail. When you see the sun appear on t'he horizon, note the time and come back down to the derk at once where in a few minutes you will see it rise again. I mill wait for you." Unsuspectingly Chandler obeyed his orders. When the observation was complete the captain remarked, "That is the first lesson in practical navigation and, by the way, a first principle of success. The sun will rise earlier for anyone who has the gumption to rise early and to the heights to see it."

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"That vivid lesson," said Chandler near the end of his career, "was one of the most valuable lessons and bits of advice I ever received. I never forgot it." After 34 languishing days a t sea he arrived a t Antwerp. This was followed by six weeks of intensive tutoring in German a t the home of a friend in Cologne. Then, with a letter of introduction from Professor Joy and a gift collection of minerals, he set out for Gottingen where he was received with much courtesy by Professor Friederick Wohler. The old professor, whose great contributions to both inorganic and organic chemistry had been made nearly 30 years before, was delighted with the minerals specimens which he added to his hobby, mineral collection, one of the largest private collections in Germany a t that time. Apparently Wohler liked the American youth from the beginning. He assigned him to a place in his private laboratory where he worked "mit meisterhaften Fleisse." Chandler also was fortunate in being placed a t once in the laboratory for advanced students under Wohler's personal supervision. There he not only absorbed his great professor's knowledge and method, but availed himself of the opportunity to attend lectures in physics by Weber, in botany by Von Griesback, and in geology by Baron Wolfgang Von Walterhansen. At the end of a most stimulating year a t Gottingen where, in Chandler's words, "the creative spirit of practical chemistry was deeply planted in my soul," Wohler advised him t o finish his studies a t Berlin. Through Wohler's influence Chandler became the private assistant of Professor Heinrich Rose, the foremost authority in analytical chemistry of the time. There, in addition to the preparation of his doctoral dissertation, he studied with and was deeply influenced by some of the most productive scientific minds in Europe, notably Heinrich Rose in analytical chemistry, Gustave Rose in mineralogy, Heinrich Magnus in industrial chemistry, Heinrich Dove in physics, Johann C. Poggendorf, the great editor of Annalen der Physik u . Chemie, and Christian Ehrenberg in microscopy. From Heinrich Magnus, whose masterful lectures attracted students from many lands, Chandler learned the art of the experimental lecture in which he was to excel for more than half a century. At the homes of the two Roses he made the acquaintance of Baron Alexander Von Humboldt, the world's greateat scientist of the time. The Baron became deeply interested in Chandler and his work and spent much time advising him on a "proper pattern for a scientific career in a country where the true nature and power of the natural sciences are practically unknown. The work of the pioneer," said the great scientist, "is slow and hard, but there is success at the end of the road. You will always be welcome to return to the fatherland to drink a t the fountainhead of scientific studies from which the knowledge and spirit of creative science flow in an ever increasing stream."

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Through Wohler, Chandler made the acquaintance of Baron Justus Von Liebig a t Munich who advised him to devote his l i e t o teaching and research, and to applying chemical science to health, trade, and industry-advice which Chandler followed zealously to the end of his life. After concluding his studies a t Berlin, with letters of introduction from Wohler and Christian Ehrenherc. -, the famous microscopist, he visited Louis Pasteur, the brilliant young professor of chemistry and dean of the faculty of science a t the University of Lille. "I was deeply impressed," said Chandler, "by his modesty and complete lack of ostentation which made him stand out in marked contrast with some of my German teachers. I wished that I might work for a year in his laboratory but I did not have sufficient funds for that and was quite homesick besides." In November, 1856, a t the age of 19, Chandler returned to his home in New Bedford with the degrees of master of arts and doctor of philosophy from Gottingen and with the best education in chemistry and allied sciences obtainable in the world at that time. In a total of three years of collegiate and university studies he had accomplished with honors more than the average doctoral student accomplished in six years. A TIME OF EXPANSION

What kind of an America did Chandler find when he returned in 1856? Practically every phase of social, economic, governmental, and educational activity was expanding rapidly. There was a decided upsurge in population growth. The nation was changing a t a high rate from a total farm economy to a balanced manufacturing status centered in towns and cities. Villages and towns east of the Mississippi rapidly were becoming cities with pressing problems of food supply, water supply, waste disposal, and public health. Agricultural production was expanding a t a notably increasing rate owing to the invention of labor-saving machinery, the rapid extension of railroad transportation, and the generous aid of the government in lowcost land settlement. A bill providing for subsidizing the establishment and operation of agricultural- and mechanic-arts colleges was being pushed through congress. The discovery of gold in California seven years before alerted the nation to its great mineral resources. Mining and quarrying in general were expanding rapidly owing to the invention of the mechanical rock drill and the first successful mechanical rock cmsher by Blake. Whale-oil lamps and tallow candles were used extensively for home and public lighting. Coal oil was beginning to he used. The petroleum industry had not been born. The Kansas-Nebraska act, which in the next three years was to fan the embers of the long smouldering sectional contest between the nation's free and slave economies into the consuming flames of a civil war, was

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being debated in the congress almost to a point of violence that was rocking the nation. Although waterpower and steam were used to some extent in manufacturing and transportation, by far the greatest part of the nation's work was done by man- and horsepower. Although chemical industries had been established in the colonies as early as 1635 by Governor John Winthrop of Connecticut, they comprised but an insignificant fraction of the nation's total. They were principally very small, inorganic-chemical enterprises that did not amount to enough to warrant a special classification. There were very few places in America where even the most elementary education in chemistry could be obtained. With the exception of Yale and Amherst, advanced courses in chemistry in American colleges were practically nonexistent. The only able teachers of chemistry in American universities were a few who had studied in French and German universities and who were fighting what seemed to be a losing battle with the classicists t o get their subject recognized as a respectable college discipline. Generally the instruction in chemistry consisted of a few lectures and experiments in courses in natural philosphy that included physics, mineralogy, geology, medicine, pharmacy, botany, zoology, and anything else in which the professor happened to be interested. There were no professional chemists. Most of the chemical technical advice came from drug manufacturers, druggists, country doctors, household and medical recipe books, almanacs, itinerant nostrum makers and soap boilers, and similar sources of proprietary science. Chemical advice for the establishment of important chemical enterprises was imported from Europe. That is what the ambitious young scientist found when he returned to his homeland, a country, as Von Helmholtz had told him, "where the nature and power of the natural and sciences were all but unknown." .~hvsical " FROM JANITOR TO FULL PROFESSOR

Joy recommended Professor J. W. Mallet of the University of Alabama, one of the best known teachers of chemistry in the United States, to be his successor. However, Union's colorful president, Eliphalet Nott, who had liked the way Chandler had taken hold of the work both as assistant and janitor, called him to his office. "Young man," said the 80-year-old president, "if you can handle the lecture work in chemistry as well as Professor Joy did, I will appoint you to succeed him and will raise you to a full professorship when you have reached the age of 21." Chandler thought he could do it and would like to try it. Thus began one of the most dynamic and successful teaching careers in the annals of American chemistry. His success as a teacher was immediate. He quickly advanced to rank of professor and head of the department. I n the seven years of his tenancy there he taught general chemistry, crystallography, mineralogy, agricultural chemistry, geology, and assaying, and brought his department to top rank in the college. He soon became one of the most influential teachers in the college. Everything he took hold of took on new life. His reputation as a lecturer carried his influence far beyond the confines of the college. He never missed an opportunity to spread the gospel of the importance of chemistry in public health, agriculture, trade, and industry. He organized a science club with membership open to students, faculty, townspeople, men in industry, agriculturists, and in fact to anyone who was interested. It was a success from the beginning with members from Albany, Troy, and other nearby towns and cities. "There," said Henry Burden of Albany, the famous iron master of the mid-nineteenth century who was much impressed with Chaudler's initiative and broad practical knowledge, "is a young man with the kind of vision and aggressive leadership that this nation needs greatly." In 1864 Professor Thomas Eggleston, the famous metallurgist who had just founded the school of mines of ~ o l u m b i aCollege and who had been attracted by Chandler's remarkable success a t Union Colleee. offered him the position of professor of chemistry in the new institution a t whatever salary he could get from the students' fees. The trustees of the college who had reluctantly consented to lend Columbia's name to the venture were so skeptical of the success of the proposed radical and bold undertaking in professional education which would not require proficiency in Greek, Latin, and metaphysics as entrance requirements that they would not appropriate anything for salaries or operating expenses. I n addition, the location of a school of mines in New York City when the mines of the country were hundreds of miles away seemed to some of them t o be not only ill-advised but preposterous. Chandler, who could see the faint glow of a new industrial dawn arising in America from the wreckage of the Civil War, shared Eggleston's vision and enthusiasm and was willing to join in the venture. "A nation can only be great if its industry is great," said Chandler. "Its -

Chandler immediately set himself up in New Bedford as an expert consultant in oil technology. He quickly found out that there was so little demand for his services that he could not make a living. What was there left but teaching? He wrote to his old friend, Professor Charles Joy at Union College, telling him of his difficulties. Joy replied that he knew of no opening in industry a t the time but that he was looking for an assistant; however, the pay was very low. Chandler did not wait to make a formal application for the job but went to Schenectady a t once. When he arrived he found that there was no money in the budget for an assistant but there was $400 for the employment of a janitor. Chandler accepted the assistantship with the title of janitor. Not only did he do the work of a full-time assistant, but did the janitorial work as well. He had been there only three months when Joy resigned to accept the professorship of chemistry a t Columbia College.

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industry can be great only if it is built on a sound technical base in which chemistry is one of the main foundation stones. I want to help build that foundation." The new school, the first school of mines in America, opened on November 15, 1864, with an all Enropeantrained faculty consisting of Thomas Eggleston, professor of mineralogy and metallurgy; General Francis Vinton, professor of mining; and Charles F. Chandler, professor of geology, analytical and applied chemistry, and assaying. Eggleston and Vinton were graduates of the Ecole de Mines of Paris with good training in general chemistry. In addition to his title of professor, Chandler was appointed dean of the school. The association of these three dynamic, far-seeing, creative minds in that pioneer venture in applied science education under Chandler's forceful leadership did more to raise Columbia to the stature of a great university with worldwide influence than anything it did in the nineteenth century. The reaistrationif 24 students was twice as greatas was expected. Chandler put his whole soul into his work. Not only did he serve as professor and dean but as janitor, plumber, carpenter, and laboratory technician. His experimentally illustrated lectures in analytical chemistry, industrial chemistry, geology, and assaying were models of excellence from the beginning. With the gift of a large quantity of minerals he immediately began the carefully planned collection of lecture illustration materials from the whole range of chemistry which in the 46 years of his teaching he built into the most unique collection of its kind in America, the Chandler Chemical Museum of Columbia University. His reputation as an assayer spread rapidly. I n 1868 he devised a new system of assay weights known thereafter as the assay ton weights, which simplified and completely revolutionized the method of evaluating the noble-metal content of ores, bullions, slags, mattes, and other metallurgical products. They are used to this day in every assay laboratory in the world. I t is impossible to calculate the value of this invention to the mining and metallurgical industries over the past century. At the end of the first year the school of mines had been such a success under Chandler's management that, after paying back $8000 it had borrowed t o meet operating expenses, each of the three founders received $2000 as his salary. The registration the second year quadrupled. The trustees of the college were so impressed that they agreed to finance its development thereafter. The school's phenomenal success and the development of its department of chemistry to a stature of world recognition under Chandler's leadership for 46 years is a glowing page in the history of American chemical science. In 1866 the New York College of Pharmacy, then in dire financial straits and almost defunct, asked Chandler, who had never heard of the institution, if he would lecture on chemistry one night each week. There would be no salary but he would have an allowance of

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$400 for experimental apparatus and lecture materials. AEter thinking it over for 24 hours Chandler decided that it was his duty to see that pharmacists had a thorough education in chemistry since "the people's lives are in their hands." From the very day that Chandler accepted the appointment of professor of chemistry, the college of pharmacy took on new life. I n his characteristic fashion he poured his soul into his lectures and laboratory courses. Registration increased a t a high rate. He made it crystal clear to his students and to the pharmacists of New York and the nation that a good knowledge of chemistry was the heart and soul of their profession. "A pharmacist," said he, "without a sound knowledge of chemistry, is likely to be an unwitting fraud." For 40 years thereafter Chandler's lectures set the standard for chemical instruction in pharmaceutical education in the country. PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIVITY

Owing to the development of alarming public health conditions in the rapidly growing city of New York, the state legislature in 1865 created the Metropolitan Board of Health with broad powers to deal with normal and emergency conditions. Where could the board find a competent scientist to make a scientific study of the sanitary problems affecting the health of the city? "The brilliant young professor of chemistry in the Columbia School.of Mines is the man," said Dr. Elisha Harris, president of the board, "if we can persuade him to tackle the job without pay, as the board has no funds." Chandler accepted. Without thought of remuneration Chandler went ahead, rendering his services without stint. He devoted special attention to the food and water supply of the city, adulteration of milk, kerosene accidents, gas factory nuisances, and general sanitation. So outstanding was his work that in the following year he was appointed chemist to the board a t a salary of $2000. Most of the members of the board were physicians who had no knowledge of chemistry and were surprised that the subject had any bearing on public health. Chandler became New York's first public health chemist. This pioneer work marked the beginning of a career in the application of chemistry to the broad field of public health that set standards that were not only adopted by New York City and many other American cities, but also by cities in England, Germany, France, Switzerland, and Italy. Nev York's sanitary code today is essentially Chandler's sanitary code which was adopted by the Metropolitan Board of Health in 1866. Chandler's reputation as an authority in sanitary chemistry in the following five years became worldwide. In 1872 he was invited to appear before a select committee of the House of Lords. By special act of the British parliament his standards and tests for the use of kerosene and petroleum products for public and household use were made law. Chandler's public health activity dealt with nu-

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merous topics. They ranged from the daily use of 30 gallons of carbolic acid sprinkled in the putrifying filth of the city's streets to reduce summer infant mortality and prevent cholera, to a systematic chemical study of the carcasses of cattle dying in the city of Texas cattle fever. This plunge into animal pathology in the treating of Texas cattle fever was bold for there was not at that time a department of pathology in any medical school on the continent. Chandler's study of lead in the city water supply and its physiological effects is a pioneering classic. So great and important were Chandler's contributions to the chemistry of public health that he was appointed president of the Metropolitan Board of Health, a position which he held for two terms, from 1873 to 1883. "So great was the board's power that it could not be tampered with by the mayor and only under extreme emergencies by the courts. I t was a law unto itself as it enacted sanitary ordinances by administrative decree and could demand the assistance of the police for enforcement and protection without question." Although Chandler had unusual administrative ability, his determination to utilize his technical training in the intelligent construction and enforcement of a sound sanitary code, come what might, under the board's great power made his ten-year administration the most productive in the annals of public-health chemistry in America. His establishment of experimental laboratory research as a sound basis for theory and practice in public health and sanitation, and his invention during that period of the present-day vented, sanitary plumbing system are only two of his many contributions to better living. No public servant had greater power and used it more effectively and honestly than did this great pioneering advocate of the efficacy of applied science, especially applied chemistry, to protect and enrich the lives of his fellow men. Chandler's reputation as a great chemistry teacher and his dramatic and successful application of chemistry and physics to the solution of the city's serious health problems brought him the offer of a position on the faculty of the New York College of Physicians and Surgeons. He already held professorships in two colleges, was chief chemist and a member of the Metropolitan Board of Health and of the Metropolitan Excise Board with heavy duties in each. His first inclination was to refuse. However, when he considered the physicians' abject ignorance of chemistry and physics, and their complete lack of appreciation of their importance as powerful and necessary tools in their prbfession, he Baw an opportunity f i r fruitful pioneer work he could not resist. In 1872 he was appointed adjunct professor of chemistrv and medical . iuris~rudence, and four vears . later was advanced to head of the department: I n 25 years with his forceful personality, unique skill as a teacher, and rich experience in applied chemistry, he did more to give chemistry a high place in medical

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education than any scientist in his generation. American medical education is deeply indebted to Chandler. With three full-time professorships and a deanship in Columbia's affiliated professional schools, and with the strong support of the college's president, Frederick A. P. Barnard, an eminent physicist, Chandler held a commanding position in chemical education in America. That he used this position forcefully, constructively, and with consummate leadership, his accomplishments in the next 40 years attest brilliant,ly. SERVICE TO GOVERNMENT

Chandler's outstanding success as a public-health chemist brought him to the attention of the National Academy of Science which had been organized in 18G3 to provide scientific advice in connection with the conduct of the Civil War. Immediately following his election to membership in 1874 he was appointed by the academy's president, Joseph Henry, to investigate the condition of the manuscript of the Declaration of Independence and report what methods should be used to restore the signatures thereon and to preserve it in the future. That was the first of a long list of important research assignments to Chandler by the academy over the 51 years of his membership. They involved research studies on problems assigned to the academy by practically every department of the national government. Among others they included sorghum sugar, starch sugar, wood preservation, food adulteration, separation of ethyl and methyl alcohol, wool scouring, dyestuffs,hog cholera, trichinosis, water supply, stream pollution, etc. His thorough and searching reports on these studies were the basis of federal legislation and departmental regulations on public health, import and export tariffs, internal revenue, custom court procedures, prevention and control of both human and livestock diseases, etc. It is doubtful if any other member in the academy's history contributed so much to the national welfare. Probably Chandler's greatest work was his demow stration that chemistry could be put to practical use not only in medicine and public health, but in industry and trade as well. Remembering the strong advice of his teachers Heinrich Magnus in Berlin, and Baron Von Liebig in Munich, he took it upon himself as one of the prime objectives of his professional life to sell chemistry to the nation's industrialists and businessmen who had no appreciation of its vast economic potentialities. "That, along mith my teaching," said Chandler to President Barnard of Columhia, "is the way I can do most to make our nation strone."

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CHEMICAL JOURNALS AND ORGANIZATIONS

The importance of and urgent need for chemistry must be broueht forcefullv " to the ~~-~ at,t,ent,ion ~ ~ -.-nf . ~-t. h..e.~ leaders in every phase of the country's economy. How could this best be done? Although the first chemical society in the world, The Chemical Society of Philadelphia, was founded in

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1792, American chemistry had no respectable organ. Silliman's American Journal of Science and Arts, founded in 1818, which for 50 years was the only medium in America for the publication of chemical papers, gave up the ghost in 1868. The Scientific American would not publish his papers because they mere "too visionary." He would found a journal of his own. I n 1870 he and his brother William, then an instructor a t Columbia, founded The American Chemist. I t was set up for the benefit of p~ofessionalchemists "who desired to publish original scientific works." Its editorial pages which glowed with Chandler's convincing enthusiasm urged American manufacturers to seek the advice and services of chemists to improve their products, lower their costs, and develop new ones. It published abstracts of papers of foreign and American journals for the purpose of making it a clearinghouse for information in both theoretical and applied chemistry. It had a corps of 28 volunteer abstractors. It also published other scientific but noncbemical information on biology, geology, mineralogy, physics, and engineering. It reflected Chandler's European education which gave him a broad international view of life. It was a high-grade scientific journal in every respect, and for the seven years of its life it courageously preached the gospel of the importance of chemistry in the development of American industry. The editors labored long and bard to maintain high standards and keep i t going. "I often felt," said Chandler, "that i t was a feeble voice crying in the wilderness, and did my best to make it stronger." Although successful in its main objectives it was a financial failure from the beginning. Each year ended with a deficit which the owner-editors had to meet out of funds from their own pockets. That was nothing new for Chandler. From the beginning of his teaching career a t Columbia, when funds were not available for materials and apparatus and the salaries of additional assistants for the increasing registration in his laboratory courses, he paid for them personally. He often advanced on loan tuition and laboratory fees for promising students who could not afford them. No records are existent, but it has been estimated by his colleagues a t Columbia that over the years of his active teaching service those payments amounted to many thousands of dollars for which he was not recompensed. "The cause of chemistry must go on whatever the cost," was Chandler's philosophy. After five years of hard work and personal sacrifice it became evident that the publication of The American Chemist was too much for two men. If it was to survive it must have the editorial and financial support of a greater number of chemists. 1n-1874 a t a meeting of the chemical section of the New York Lyceum of Natural History, of which Chandler was a founder and member, the subject of a chemical centennial was discussed. This gave Chand-

ler an opportunity to propose the organization of a chemical society. The proposal was supported by many New York chemists. Two years later a t a meeting in Chandler's home on 54th Street, a committee was appointed with Chandler as chairman to draft a constitution and bylaws for an American Chemical Society. The committee issued a call for an organizational meeting to be held April 6, 1876, a t the Kern York College of Pharmacy a t the corner of Waverly Place and University Place in New York City. There in Chandler's lecture room with Chandler in the chair and 35 chemists in attendance, the American Chemical Society was born. The Columbia professor of chemistry was a happy man. A new light which he had seen from the top of t'he mainmast of his bold creative imagination appeared as a glowing reality on the horizon to mark the morning of a new era in American chemical science. Arrangements were immediately made t o publish the proceedings of the new society in The American Chemist. That was done for two years when its pnblication was suspended to make way for The Journal of the American Chemical Society which began its career in 1879. I n the seven years of The American Chemist's life the Chandlers conceived the broad plan, breathed into it the breath of life, and laid the firm foundations on which the great American Chemical Society and its system of journals, now the prideof the scientific world, have been built. That was pioneering in excelsis! INDUSTRIAL CHEMISTRY

Chandler's greatest contributions to chemical science were made in the capacity of consultant to industry. As mentioned previously, a prime objective of his professional ambition was to teach industrialists and leaders of business the practical importance of chemistry. His dynamic and constructive part in the development of practically every phase of the American chemical industry from 1864 to his death in 1925 is a glowing testimonial that he realized his ambition. From his broad European education he considered the whole scope of chemistry as his field for operation. His consulting work covered the broad chemical aspects of water supply and its uses, milk and foods in general, coal and water gas, cane sugar, starch, glucose, iron and steel, aluminum, paints, lubricant-, dye stuffs, petroleum refining, heating and lighting, ventilation, photography, caustic soda and chlorine, fermentation, municipal and factory waste disposal, vegetable and animal oils, food preservation, cosmetics, leather, textiles, and industrial poisons. I n all of this work Chandler made extensive use of his profound knowledge and skill in analytical chemistry. To solve the problems that confronted him he developed new analytical methods and new experimental apparatus, notably the assay ton weights, a universal flash-point apparatus, the Chandler photometer, the Chandler-Baum6 hydrometer scale, a sludge metering device, and a. flow-meter chemical-solu~ion feeder

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for water softening. The principle of the latter is embodied in some modern proportioning pumps and chemical feed-control devices. With the increase of the use of chemistry in the great industrial development that followed the Civil War, especially in the last quarter of the nineteenth century and the first decade of the twentieth, the demand for Chandler's consulting services was so great that he generally was recognized as America's foremost industrial chemist. In the acceptance of consulting commitments he was partial to assignments that would enable him to use his services in the public interest. While I shall not attempt t o enumerate them, it is appropriate in this year (1954) to mention two examples. Seventy years ago in a detailed chemical and nutritional investigation that is a classic, he pleaded with Governor Grover Cleveland of New York, without success, to veto a bill passed by the legislature to restrict the production and sale of oleomargarine on the ground that i t would deprive the public and especially the poor people of the state of a low-cost wholesome food. That vicious law, whose influence wart to extend t o other states, has just been removed from the New York statutes for those identical reasons. L4tthe turn of the century, when a proposed national pure food law drawn by his friend Dr. Harvey W. Wiley of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, was presented to the congress, Chsndler, who was in sympathy with the general objectives of such a law, opposed it vigorously on the ground that it went too far and especially for the reason that it would attach a stigma to the word "chemical" which was wholly unjustified and which would he against the public interest. The numerous revisions and modifications of the law enacted in 1906, which have removed basically unsound and impractical restrictions, have proved that Chandler was right. However, the stigma which it attached to the word 'Lchemical"was so deeply planted in the public's mind that, as he predicted, it still bedevils scientific progress in sound food production, often t o the detriment of the nation's food economy. Chandler's pioneer judgment in such matters was amazingly sound. The legal aspects of his consulting work were of great importance. As an expert witness he had no equal. In the roles of expert witness, advisor to the courts, and counselor to legislative committees of cities, states, and nation he established principles of procedure, of legal interpretation, and of judicial evaluation that are largely the basis of American chemical jurisprudence. Selfishness was entirely absent in Chandler's philosophy of life. Anything he had in his vast storehouse of knowledge could be had for the asking if, in his judgment, it would advance the cause of chemical science. He was particularly generous if the information seeker was a young man. It is not generally known hut should be stated here that there is what appears to he reliable evidence that

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the basic idea in one of the earliest processes for the direct fixation of atmospheric nitrogen came from that storehouse. In all of his extensive consulting connections Chandler never missed an opportunity t o impress upon his clients the imperative need for competent scientists, particularly chemists, in their organizations, and their responsibility to support scientific education in American universities and technical schools. Funds for the construction and equipment of Havemeyer Hall which houses Columbia's large departments of chemistry and chemical engineering, for the endowment of the large Phoenix Research Fund, for the equipment of special research laboratories, and for the support of scholarships and fellowships for graduate study in chemistry and physics are striking testimonials that those pleas bore abundant fruit. As a token of Columbia's deep appreciation of his tireless and loyalservices in its behalf it is particularly fitting that the nine-story building which houses the extensive and excellently equipped research laboratories of the departments of chemistry and chemical engineering was named the Chandler Chemical Laboratory. Although so-called courses in industrial chemistry sprang up in universities and technical schools during the last two decades of the nineteenth century, most of them were little more than descriptive extensions of general and analytical chemistry by teachers who had neither experience in chemical industry nor the remotest conception of its scope or engineering requirements. Chandler's extensive consulting experience soon taught him that the conventional university courses in chemistry were decidedly inadequate to train chemists for industry, and that something would have to be done about it. As early as 1890, as dean of Columbia's faculty of applied science, he proposed to the president and trustees of the university that a four-year curriculum, t o be known as engineering chemistry or chemical engineering, leading t o an appropriate engineering degree, be set up. The proposal was met by vigorous opposition fromfaculties of theengineeringdepartments who characterized it as a radical innovation that was neither chemistry nor engineering, and which, if adopted, would encroach upon their time-honored precincts. Opposition meant little t o Chandler when he knew he was right. After 14 years of struggle against persistent opposition his efforts were crowned with success. I n 1904, just one-half century ago, the trustees of the university approved his four-year curriculum in chemical engineering leading t o the degree of chemical engineer. This was the first completely integrated four-year curriculum in chemistry and engineering based on mathematics, physical science, fundamental engineering science, and economics leading to the degree of chemical engineer in America. Chandler considered it one of the crowning accomplishments of his educational career. With the industrial expansion in the nation during the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the number

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of chemists in industry increased rapidly. Chandler knew most of them personally. Most of them were employed in New York City and its vicinity and many were his former students. His concern for their professional welfare was always first in his mind. I n 1865 he, with some friends, had founded the New York University Club to promote the welfare of graduates of the world's universities who were located in New York City and vicinity. It was a great success. Chandler felt that something like that should he organized for chemists. Accordingly, in 1898 a group of chemists under his enthusiastic leadership organized The Chemists Club of New York to promote the welfare of chemists and those interested in the science and practical application of chemistry. Although it was organized t o establish permanent headquarters for the chemical interests of New York City and vicinity, it soon became a national institution. Its great chemical library founded and augmented by substantial gifts from Chandler, open to professional chemists and research workers, is one of the finest in America,. This unique club fathered by Chandler has done more to further the social and business interests of

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chemical industry and t o promote the welfare of industrial chemists than any institution of its kind in the world. Chandler was not only a great pioneer teacher and practitioner of chemistry, hut also a great humanitarian. In addition he was a great chemical diplomat. As a representative and ambassador of applied science education, of professional and scientific societies, of public health societies, of American chemical industry, and of city, state, and nation, he brilliantly carried the influence of American chemistry to the educational, governmental, and trade centers of the world. On those foundation stones, shaped and laid by Charles Frederick Chandler, the master builder, stand American chemical science, American chemical education, the American chemical and chemical engineering professions, and the great American chemical industries which make the nation strong. Such were the life accomplishments of the pioneer Columbia professor of chemistry who grew out of the New England boy who one century ago ascended to the heights that he might see the sun rise twice on Independence Day.